Internet traffic in Iran increasing

(radar.cloudflare.com)

42 points | by Cider9986 1 hour ago

6 comments

  • myth_drannon 14 minutes ago
    Why is the bot traffic in Iran is so high -75%? I checked Argentina - 16%, Netherlands - 65%.
    • stn8188 4 minutes ago
      Oh come to think of it, I had some attempted logins to some home-hosted infrastructure from Iran last week...
  • r721 50 minutes ago
  • 2OEH8eoCRo0 19 minutes ago
    The US just struck them again at Bandar Abbas
  • nostrademons 30 minutes ago
    The weird thing is: Iran seems to be acting like the war is ending, and that their peace plan has been accepted, and yet now it's the Trump administration that says it's all fake news. In the past the Trump administration has claimed the war was ending and Iran said (truthfully) it's all fake news.

    It makes me wonder if something has shifted with the internal power dynamics in Iran, and the civilian government at least is worried about being ousted if this continues. The usual reason why you would lie about peace being around the corner is to placate the citizenry and prevent them from revolting.

    Also relatedly, Trump is now doubling down on U.S. demands and threats of more military action. This is what you do if you sense your opponent is weak. Does U.S. intelligence know something we don't?

    • protocolture 8 minutes ago
      >Trump is now doubling down on U.S. demands and threats of more military action.

      He does this every day even if hes not at war. He threatens to nuke canada and destroy the EU. You literally can never take him seriously.

      • Gigachad 6 minutes ago
        The prime example of the boy who cried wolf.
    • twothreeone 20 minutes ago
      Isn't it also possible that this happened to be one of the explicit pre-conditions for a treaty by the US?
      • nostrademons 13 minutes ago
        It could be a trust-building move, open up a little and see if it's reciprocated, although if it's a trust-building move the right response is probably not to threaten to obliterate them, or to launch more military strikes.

        Although this conflict has seen both sides consistently choose the wrong response in basically every situation, which is why it's still going on.

    • cjbgkagh 20 minutes ago
      There are many reasons to lie about peace being around the corner, it is the default norm. It is in part to place the blame of further conflicts on your enemies, i.e. I wanted peace but clearly they did not.

      There is a conflict of narratives and one way to help push your narrative is to act like it is the reality on the ground. Unless the US is going to send in a ground army or nuke Iran then all we have at the moment is a pointless stalemate and the longer this goes on the more people will be upset at Trump and Israel for creating this situation.

    • Forgeties79 20 minutes ago
      > Also relatedly, Trump is now doubling down on U.S. demands and threats of more military action. This is what you do if you sense your opponent is weak. Does U.S. intelligence know something we don't?

      Hasn’t he done this every week since it started? He constantly bounces between “we’ve almost got a great deal” and “we are going to ABSOLUTELY OBLITERATE IRAN1!!!1!”

  • plazmatic 1 hour ago
    [dead]
  • mlmonkey 1 hour ago
    I don't think the current regime has changed their policy out of the goodness of their hearts, or for the concerns of the citizenry. If I were to hazard a guess, I'm guessing it is so their army of digital burglars can wreak havoc on US sites, in retaliation for the bombings by the US. So I guess we can only expect more ransomware and more digital mayhem.
    • tptacek 40 minutes ago
      Iranian-sponsored threat actors have had network access throughout this entire conflict.
      • 866-RON-0-FEZ 35 minutes ago
        Thanks for reminding everyone of the obvious. You'd think it wouldn't be necessary.

        The popular theory that all Iranian internet was shut off like Johnny pulling the plug out of the socket in Airplane is simplistic and beyond ludicrous.

        • AznHisoka 26 minutes ago
          That fact wasnt obvious to me.
      • lysace 36 minutes ago
        I still kinda suspect we'll see a spike in pro-hamas propaganda in the west, even though most of it so far has come from government sanctioned iranian actors.

        I think we should shut them down. NK 2.0.

        • platinumrad 24 minutes ago
          Insofar as it being regular citizens expression their opinions, yes, even if we might not agree with them. I wouldn't call that "pro-hamas propaganda".
          • lysace 14 minutes ago
            What would you call it?
    • platinumrad 26 minutes ago
      I'm not a fan of the Iranian government at all but this is pure Iran Derangement Syndrome. If you thought about this for half a second you'd realize that their "army of digital burglars" has had internet access the entire time. No state, and especially not one that specializes in proxy warfare, is going to intentionally cripple its actors with the highest damage to plausible deniability ratio.
      • dakolli 2 minutes ago
        Its also simply not true, Iranians have been on the internet this entire time. These people commenting are Israelis, which HN is full of.
    • gpm 1 hour ago
      The internet is a pretty critical economic tool. I'd imagine that a good portion of the reason is simply to let Iranian businesses function.
    • Laurel1234 39 minutes ago
      Wouldn't regime glow in the darks have open access already? You'd imagine they'd run a whitelist or something.
    • dakolli 3 minutes ago
      I've been able to talk to every dev I know in Iran this whole time and none of them are state affiliated, just regular open source contributers. Don't trust 5 eyes (this includes CF) and what they say about Iran. There have been Iranians on twitter this entire time also that are completely normal citizens.

      Israelis and US news sources will tell you Iran is strangling their people of internet and then upload 300 videos a day from inside Iran allegedly from bystanders filming strikes or whatever.

      Its wild how brainwashed western tech people are. If I were a world leader though, I'd probably cut my citizens off from the Western Internet. The original patch for the ARMY psyops division is literally a ghost holding its hand out from way above with electrical signals pulsating from its hand. Which is really future thinking considering this patch is from the 40s-50s. Look up "Army PSYOPs ghost patch". I always say Starlink should change its logo to that.

      Don't fall for the trap where the US and Israel paints Iran as some authoritarian censor. The US is far more authoritarian, we have the largest prison population in the world and the most corrupt leaders on earth. Also, Iran hasn't been committing a genocide. I would love to see evidence for the thousands of executions they allegedly did, still haven't seen a single bit of video evidence for that other than 400p 10 second clips of random bags on a ground.

    • whyage 57 minutes ago
      You might be right; most of the traffic is bot-driven
    • lysace 41 minutes ago
      The more important aspect is that the regime now feels certain enough that they have killed enough of the internal opposition so that the security forces can handle rest even with open comms.